The proposed expansion of the BRICS group has prompted several commentators to question whether it could eventually challenge the West. The existing five members, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa have invited six new states to join: Iran, Argentina, and Ethiopia; and also several Western allies: Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt.
Beijing has been lobbying its fellow BRICS capitals to expand for years, and President Xi Jinping did little to hide his delight when the announcement was made during the bloc’s August summit in Johannesburg.
“This membership expansion is historic,” he said, adding it showed, “the determination of BRICS countries for unity and cooperation with the broader developing countries.”
Another member seemingly satisfied was Russia. President Vladimir Putin used his speech at the summit, via video link, to attack sanctions on his country. The growth of BRICS membership will be used as a sign that Western efforts to isolate Moscow are failing.
Yet despite this positivity from its Russian and Chinese rivals, the US has been relatively muted on the expansion. US National Security Advisor, Jake Sullivan simply commented that he did not see the bloc, “evolving into some kind of geopolitical rival to the United States or anyone else.”
He added that the many members had, “differences of view on critical issues,” that would make effective cohesion challenging.
But should the West be worried? Might BRICS emerge as a new rival to the US-dominated Western alliance?